
June 9, 2026
Georgia-Nebraska Boycott Texas Tech, Jaylen Waddle's Broncos Fantasy Outlook
Here's what's trending in fantasy football on June 9, 2026.
-
Georgia, Nebraska launch a boycott of Texas Tech in all sports
— Score: 95/100
Two major programs are punishing Texas Tech for simply trying to keep its starting QB available for 2026.
-
Fantasy Football Video: Can Jaylen Waddle be the George Pickens of 2026 after move to Denver?
— Score: 71/100
Yahoo's Matt Harmon and Justin Boone break down whether Waddle can be Denver's breakout receiver this season.
-
Carolina Panthers All-PFF Team: The best players of the past 20 years
— Score: 71/100
PFF's 20th-anniversary franchise deep-dives turn to Carolina, ranking the Panthers' best players by position.
-
Rams DC Chris Shula: We have our principles, but Myles Garrett will do what he does best
— Score: 48/100
Myles Garrett hit the Rams practice field Monday, signaling LA's defense is being built around his elite pass rush.
-
Mike LaFleur not worried about Josh Sweat "at all"
— Score: 0/100
Cardinals edge rusher Josh Sweat is attending minicamp but not practicing, though Arizona's staff remains unconcerned.
-
Big Dom debunks social-media theory regarding A.J. Brown's exit from Philly
— Score: 0/100
An uncorroborated social-media explanation for A.J. Brown leaving Philadelphia is being shot down by those in the know.
-
Deshaun Watson: Starting QB decision not imminent
— Score: 0/100
Cleveland's Todd Monken won't name a starter between Watson and Shedeur Sanders before minicamp ends Thursday.
-
NFL minicamp daily updates: Yes! Jaxson Dart is ad...
— Score: 0/100
ESPN's NFL Nation tracks Week 2 OTA action across 17 teams, with Jaxson Dart emerging as a notable headline.
-
From QB battles to rookie progress, here's everyth...
— Score: 0/100
ESPN frames the key minicamp storylines to monitor, from Jalen Hurts and Mahomes to QB battles in Arizona and Minnesota.
-
Lane Johnson: I didn't want to go out on last season
— Score: 0/100
Eagles veteran tackle Lane Johnson confirms he's returning for Year 14, motivated by refusing to end on a sour note.
The Day in Review
College football is tearing itself apart over roster control, the NFL's minicamp season is quietly reshuffling the fantasy landscape, and a wide receiver named Jaylen Waddle is sitting at the center of one of the summer's most interesting sleeper debates. Today wasn't a slow news day — it was a day where the biggest story had almost nothing to do with the NFL, yet told us everything about where football power is heading.
The Texas Tech boycott by Georgia and Nebraska is the loudest story in sports right now, and it deserves more than a shrug from fantasy managers. On the surface, this is a college athletics drama — a program trying to retain its starting quarterback, rival schools hitting back with a scheduling freeze. But zoom out and you see something more seismic: the transfer portal and NIL era have turned roster management into a full-contact political sport. Schools are now weaponizing their schedules the way corporations weaponize contracts. For fantasy players, the downstream consequence is real. The instability of college football pipelines — where a quarterback's availability is now subject to institutional politics — makes projecting future NFL talent murkier than ever. The next Patrick Mahomes or Lamar Jackson may be stuck in a boycott crossfire before they ever throw a pass in a game that counts. When power programs start punishing each other over player retention, it's the players, and ultimately the fans trying to evaluate future NFL draft capital, who pay the price.
Now, to the story that actually moves your 2026 fantasy draft board: Jaylen Waddle in Denver. The George Pickens comparison floated by Matt Harmon and Justin Boone isn't just clickbait — it's a structurally sound argument. Pickens went from talented-but-underutilized in Pittsburgh to a fantasy WR1 the moment he landed with a franchise that gave him genuine target share and quarterback investment. Waddle in Denver carries a similar profile. He's an elite route runner who spent his Miami years fighting for touches in a crowded, dysfunction-plagued offense. Now he steps into a Broncos system that, while not elite at QB, is desperate for a legitimate alpha receiver. If Denver's offense finds even league-average efficiency, Waddle's yards-per-route-run talent makes him a slam-dunk WR2 with WR1 upside. He's the kind of player you reach for two rounds early in a snake draft and feel justified about by Week 6.
The Cleveland quarterback situation deserves sharper attention than it's getting. Todd Monken refusing to name a starter between Deshaun Watson and Shedeur Sanders before minicamp closes isn't a non-answer — it's a signal. Coaches don't leave competitions open out of indecision; they leave them open because they haven't seen enough, or because the incumbent hasn't done enough to close the door. Watson's body and history are well-documented concerns. Sanders, the rookie, is a raw talent with a legitimate NFL arm. For fantasy managers, this battle carries enormous consequences for every Cleveland skill-position player on your radar. Amari Cooper's value swings wildly depending on who's under center. The same goes for whoever earns targets in that backfield. Don't draft a Browns pass-catcher until this quarterback competition has a winner — and keep checking back, because Monken's Thursday minicamp deadline could suddenly matter a great deal.
The Myles Garrett-to-the-Rams story is still crystallizing, but Chris Shula's phrasing on Tuesday — "he'll do what he does best" — tells you exactly how LA plans to deploy him. This isn't a system-first defense bending to accommodate a star; it's a defense being architecturally reconstructed around Garrett's one-on-one dominance. For fantasy purposes, defensive coordinators who scheme around a premier edge rusher tend to create ripple effects: the interior becomes more exploitable, and opposing offensive lines burn extra resources on the edges. That means Los Angeles's defensive opponents could see their quarterbacks pressured on early downs more consistently than last year, which affects game script and, by extension, how opposing running backs and wide receivers are used. Garrett is a IDP monster, but his presence reshapes every game he's in for fantasy purposes far beyond the sack column.
Tomorrow, keep your eyes locked on two things: any Cleveland beat reporter dropping a hint about Monken's QB lean as minicamp hits its final day Thursday, and any updated depth-chart signals coming out of the Denver camp regarding Waddle's role in the starting offense. Those two data points alone could define the most important fantasy decisions of your early August drafts. The offseason fog is starting to lift — and today's headlines are the first clear weather on the horizon.